Good job by #Mysuru Police, but this should've happened much earlier.
Apart from Howrah Express, I've noticed similar concerns on Bagmati Express (10 : 30 AM) and occasionally on the SMVT Bengaluru Express (3 : 45 AM) too.
#Illegalimmigrants@rpfswrmys
MEGASTAR #Chiranjeevi Fans donated 50 NEET–JEE study book sets to the Girl students who are studying in the Government Pre-University College in Chintamani
Boss @KChiruTweets fans 👏👏
#MegastarChiranjeevi
His name was Prakash Rao.
He sold tea on a street in Cuttack, Odisha.
His father, a former soldier, had started the stall, and Prakash Rao began working there when he was just six years old.
He was a bright student who dreamed of becoming a doctor.
His family could not afford to keep him in school, and he had to leave his education unfinished.
Years later, he fell seriously ill.
A single unit of blood donated by a stranger saved his life.
He never forgot that act of kindness.
Determined to repay the debt, he went on to donate blood more than two hundred times during his lifetime.
Then he turned his attention to the children living in the nearby slums.
Many had no access to education and were growing up on the streets.
Prakash Rao decided to do something extraordinary.
In 2000, he started a free school for them.
He spent half of everything he earned from selling tea to keep the school running.
He paid for their education and cooked a hot meal for the children every day with his own hands.
Over the years, hundreds of children passed through that small school, and many went on to study in government schools and colleges.
In 2019, the tea seller from Cuttack was honoured with the Padma Shri.
A man who could not afford to become a doctor spent the rest of his life healing lives in another way.
Follow for stories India deserves to remember.
అంబటి రాంబాబుకు బిగ్షాక్
రాంబాబుపై ఎస్సీ,ఎస్టీ అట్రాసిటీ కేసు
విధుల్లో ఉన్న పోలీసును నెట్టినందుకు మరో ��ేసు
కులంపేరుతో దూషించారంటూ వ���సీపీ నేతలపై..
ఎస్సీ మహిళ ఫిర్యాదుతో కేసు నమోదు
పోలీస్ యాక్ట్లోని 30, 30Aతో పాటు..
BNSసెక్షన్ 223, 132r/w 3(5) కేసు
APకి Super Highway వస్తోంది!
బెంగళూరు ↔ విజయవాడ... ఇక 6-7 గంటల్లోనే!
343 KM Greenfield Expressway 68% పనులు పూర్తి.
#BENGALURU ↔ #AMARAVATI ↔ #VIJAYAWADA కనెక్టివిటీకి భారీ బూస్ట్.
Madras High Court had ruled that teaching the Bhagavad Gita, Vedanta, and Yoga is not "religious activity" under the FCRA, calling them part of India's civilizational heritage and ethical, philosophical, and educational traditions.
🚨 Ironically, Indian Media Didn’t Cover This
Three Indian teenagers created Plas-stick, a biodegradable powder from tamarind seeds that removes microplastics from water without electricity or complex machinery
They won the 2026 Earth Prize, making India proud 🇮🇳
His name was G. D. Naidu.
He was born in 1893 in a small village near Coimbatore, into a farming family.
He hated school, left after the third standard, and never returned to formal education.
As a teenager, he saw a British officer riding a motorcycle and could not believe a vehicle could move without an animal pulling it.
Determined to own one, he left his village, worked for nearly three years as a waiter in a hotel, and saved every coin until he could buy a motorcycle.
Then he did something unusual.
He took the entire machine apart, piece by piece, simply to understand how it worked.
By putting it back together again, he taught himself to be a mechanic.
That curiosity changed his life.
He began with a single bus that he drove himself and eventually built one of the finest bus services in the country.
In 1937, at his workshop in Coimbatore, he built India’s first indigenous electric motor.
That invention played a major role in transforming Coimbatore into one of India’s leading industrial cities.
He did not stop there.
Over his lifetime, he developed more than a hundred inventions, including an electric razor that won international recognition, ultra thin shaving blades, a tamper proof voting machine, a fruit juice extractor, an affordable radio for ordinary homes, and even a small two seater car, though he was denied a licence to manufacture it.
People began calling him the Edison of India.
Nobel laureate C. V. Raman described him as a man in a million.
A boy who walked away from school after the third standard spent the rest of his life teaching a nation how to build.
Follow for stories India deserves to remember.
Many congratulations to Jyothi Yarraji on becoming Asia's fastest woman in the 100m hurdles by winning gold at the 65th National Inter-State Senior Athletics Championships.
After a year-long battle with injury, she has not just returned to the track but displayed an indomitable spirit, outpacing the field in a brilliant 12.99s.
She brought double delight to the nation as, apart from winning gold, she earlier in the day clocked 13.14s to meet the qualifying standard for the 20th Asian Games Aichi–Nagoya 2026.